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US

Hollywood Farmer’s Market Sees Shots Fired – Deadline

UPDATE: Shortly before noon, police confirmed that the Hollywood Farmer’s Market suspected gunman was taken into custody.

LAPD confirmed that the man had been firing a gun Sunday morning. No injuries were reported.

EARLIER: Los Angeles television station KTLA reported a series of gunshots shut down the Hollywood Farmers’ Market Sunday morning around 7:30 AM.

Witnesses described an “active shooter” situation, but no reports of injuries or deaths were immediately available. Los Angeles police received reports of a man with a handgun who fired “multiple rounds” in the 1600 block of Cosmo Street.

Around 7:30 am, Los Angeles police received reports of a man with a handgun who had fired “multiple rounds” in the 1600 block of Cosmo Street.

The Hollywood Farmers’ Market was closed for the investigation. A police helicopter was seen overhead, and around 9:20 AM, LAPD said there was an active standoff with a suspect who was throwing rocks from a balcony. A SWAT team was on the scene.

Farmers’ Market organizers posted a statement on Facebook that said in part, “We’re glad our staff and vendors are OK.” Shoppers were also encouraged to visit the Farmers’ Market sister location at Atwater Village.697

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Entertainment

Nichelle Nichols, groundbreaking Star Trek actress, is dead at 89

Despite concerns, the episode aired without blowback. In fact, it got the most “fan mail that Paramount had ever gotten on Star Trek for one episode,” Nichols said in a 2010 interview with the Archive of American Television.

“I shall have more to say about the trailblazing, incomparable Nichelle Nichols, who shared the bridge with us as Lt. Uhura of the USS Enterprise, and who passed today at age 89,” George Takei wrote on Twitter. “For today, my heart is heavy, my eyes shining like the stars you now rest among, my dearest friend.”

Takei played Sulu in the original star trek series alongside Nichols. But her impact on her was felt beyond her immediate co-stars on her, and many others in the star trek world also tweeted their condolences.

Celia Rose Gooding, who currently plays Uhura in Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, wrote on Twitter that Nichols “made room for so many of us. She was the reminder that not only can we reach the stars, but our influence is essential to their survival. Forget shaking the table, she built it.”

Star Trek: Voyager alum Kate Mulgrew tweeted, “Nichelle Nichols was The First. She was a trailblazer who navigated a very challenging trail with grit, grace, and a gorgeous fire we are not likely to see again.”

Like other original cast members, Nichols also appeared in six big-screen spinoffs starting in 1979 with Star Trek: The Motion Pictures and often star trek fan conventions. She also served for many years as a NASA recruiter, helping bring minorities and women into the astronaut corps.

Actor Nichelle Nichols speaks during a Star Trek Convention in 2014.

Actor Nichelle Nichols speaks during a Star Trek Convention in 2014. Credit:AP

original star trek premiered on NBC on September 8, 1966. Its multicultural, multiracial cast was creator Gene Roddenberry’s message to viewers that in the far-off future – the 23rd century – human diversity would be fully accepted.

“I think many people took it into their hearts … that what was being said on TV at that time was a reason to celebrate,” Nichols said in 1992 when a star trek exhibit was on view at the Smithsonian Institution.

She often recalled how the Reverend Martin Luther King jnr was a fan of the show and praised her role and personally encouraged her to stay with the series.

“When I told him I was going to miss my co-stars and I was leaving the show, he became very serious and said, ‘You cannot do that,’” she told The Tulsa World (Oklahoma) in a 2008 interview.

“’You’ve changed the face of television forever, and therefore, you’ve changed the minds of people,’” she said the civil rights leader told her.

“That foresight Dr King had was a lightning bolt in my life,” Nichols said.

More recently, she had a recurring role on television’s Heroesplaying the great-aunt of a young boy with mystical powers.

Grace Dell Nichols was born on December 28, 1932, in Robbins, Illinois, a Chicago suburb, to Samuel Earl Nichols and Lishia Mae Nichols. Her father de ella was a chemist and town mayor, according to Star Trek FAQ, a 2012 book by Mark Clark. She was one of nine children in a family that included several half siblings.

Nichols hated being called “Gracie,” which everyone insisted on, she said in the 2010 interview. When she was a teen her mother told her she had wanted to name her Michelle, but she thought she ought to have alliterative initials like Marilyn Monroe, whom Ella Nichols loved. Hence, “Nichelle”.

Nichols studied ballet and Afro-Cuban dance as a child first worked professionally as a singer and dancer in Chicago at age 14, moving on to New York nightclubs and working for a time with the Duke Ellington and Lionel Hampton bands before coming to Hollywood for her film debut in 1959’s Porgy and Bess, where she worked alongside Sidney Poitier, Dorothy Dandridge, Sammy Davis jnr and Pearl Bailey. The role “opened doors for me that I might have otherwise been knocking on for years,” Nichols wrote in her autobiography of her.

In 1951, she married Foster Johnson, a dancer, and had a son, Kyle. The marriage ended in divorce.

In 1964, she appeared in her first TV episode, The Lieutenantanother show by Roddenberry.

According to the autobiography, the two struck up a friendship that became a romance until Nichols learned that the married writer was also having an affair with Majel Barrett. Barrett played nurse Chapel in the original star trek, had recurring roles in subsequent films and married Roddenberry. Nichols’s friendship with the producer continued.

Nichols was known as being unafraid to stand up to Shatner on the set when others complained that he was stealing scenes and camera time.

Nichols revived her Uhura role in the 1979 movie, Star Trek: The Motion Pictures, in which the character was promoted to lieutenant commander. In the next feature film, Star Trek II: The Wrath of KhanUhura had reached the rank of full commander.

In 1992, Mae Jemison, who as a child followed the exploits of the starship Enterprise on television, became the first black female astronaut to enter space. Before blasting off aboard the US space shuttle Endeavour, she called Nichols to thank her for her inspiration from her, according to a 1996 profile of her in Stanford News magazine.

“Images show us possibilities,” Jemison said, according to the article. “A lot of times, fantasy is what gets us through to reality.”

In 1968, in the last season of star trekNichols married for a second time, to songwriter Duke Mondy, according to FAQ. They remained together until 1972.

Her schedule became limited starting in 2018 when her son announced that she was suffering from advanced dementia.

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Sports

Tennis legend Ash Barty shares loved-up photo after she marries long-time boyfriend Garry Kissick in intimate wedding in Queensland

Australian tennis legend Ash Barty has married her long-time partner Garry Kissick in a private and intimate ceremony in front of close family and friends.

The former No.1 and her golfing boyfriend shared their vowels at a secret venue in Queensland earlier this month after she returned from a trip to the British Open.

Guests who attended the beautiful day included fellow great Pat Rafter, former doubles partner and friend Casey Dellacqua, ex-player Alicia Molik and junior coach Jim Joyce.

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Those who were lucky enough to be invited to the wedding were told by the notoriously private couple to avoid posting any photos to their social media.

Barty took to Instagram on Saturday night to announce the news she had tied the knot with Kissick, 31, with a loved-up photo of the newlyweds.

“Husband & Wife,” the 26-year-old captioned the sweet picture.

The down-to-earth Aussie looked stunning in a custom-made hater-neck style Suzanne Harward designed wedding gown with her hair tied back into a low bun.

Kissick appeared dapper dressed in a black tuxedo with a matching bow tie.

The lovebirds were all smiles as they gazed into one another’s eyes set to the backdrop of what appeared to be in a tropical location near the rainforest.

Tennis stars across the planet and Australian athletes flooded the comments section to share their congratulations to the new husband and wife.

“Yes, you two – congratulations,” former Australian wheelchair tennis champion Dylan Alcott wrote on the post.

“Amazing!! Wishing you lots of love and happiness,” surfing pro Mick Fanning said.

“Congratulations. Happy and love forever,” former Australian cricketer Matthew Hayden added.

While former number one Australian golfer Adam Scott simply commented on a love heart emoji.

Casey Dellacqua, Rennae Stubbs, Caroline Wozniacki, Julia Goerges, Kiki Bertens, Maddison Inglis, Caroline Garcia, Lizette Cabrera and Johanna Konta were some of the past and present tennis players who shared their well wishes.

Kissick proposed to Barty in November after she capped off a spectacular year on the court where she won Wimbledon and four other WTA titles.

The three-time Grand Slam champion met her now husband in 2016 at Brisbane’s Brookwater Golf Club where he has worked.

Barty, who is a keen golfer, was visiting to play a round on the greens when the pair immediately clicked and began dating.

Their relationship did not go public until she brought Kissick to the John Newcombe Awards, where she received Australia’s highest tennis honour, and rumors began to swirl she was officially off the market.

He has toured with Barty around the globe since her career suddenly exploded and while she steadily climbed to the top of the world’s rankings.

In March, the Aussie stunned the sporting world when she announced her retirement news only two months after she won the Australian Open.

The 25-year-old posted an emotional six-minute video of a sit-down interview with close friend and former doubles partner, Casey Dellacqua, to reveal the news.

“There’s no right way or wrong way, this is perfect for me to share it with you to talk to you about it, with my team, my loved ones, that I will be retiring from tennis,” Barty emotionally said as she tried to hold back tears.

“It’s the first time I’ve said it out loud, it’s hard to say but I’m so happy and I’m so ready.”

Barty believes she does not have the “physical drive” or the “emotional want” to continue the successful career since her tennis comeback in 2016.

The eleven cricketer turned tennis champion described being “physically spent” and felt it was time to “chase other dreams” she wants to conquer.

“I just know, I am spent, physically I have nothing more to give. That for me is success, I’ve given absolutely everything I can to this beautiful sport of tennis.

“I’m really happy with that. For me that is my success.”

She has been enjoying her time off spending more time with family, including her children she speaks fondly of, and friends.

The sports lover sparked suggestions she would make a return to the world stage through golf after she participated in the Icon Series and then later attended the British Open to watch Aussie Cameron Smith triumph.

“You guys just can’t accept that I don’t want to play professional sport anymore,” Barty told 101.9 The Fox while promoting her children’s book series.

“I love golf, it’s a hobby of mine. It will not be my profession, I have no intention of making it my profession but I hack around once a week if I can — and I play off four.

“There’s no need, there’s no desire for me to play professional sport, particularly golf. I love it as a walkaround with my girlfriends and friends but yeah, not for me.”

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Australia

Darwin traveler fined over undeclared fast food from Bali amid foot-and-mouth disease concerns

A traveler from Indonesia has been fined thousands of dollars for sneaking two beef sausage McMuffins and a ham croissant into Australia.

Passengers returning from Indonesia have been facing tougher biosecurity checks, after the detection of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in cows in Bali.

The highly contagious disease, which is yet to reach Australia, affects cattle, sheep, goats, and pigs, and the virus would have severe consequences for the nation’s animal health and trade.

A biosecurity detector dog at Darwin airport sniffed out the fast food meat products in a passenger’s backpack last week, with the traveler fined $2,664.

The pork and beef snacks were seized and will be tested for foot-and-mouth disease, before being destroyed.

An outbreak of the disease in Indonesia has prompted Australian biosecurity officials to categorize some meat products as “risk items”.

A long line at the Darwin Airport check-in counter during the COVID-19 lockdown.
Biosecurity measures have ramped up since foot-and-mouth disease was detected in Bali.(ABC News: Michael Franchi)

Minister for Agriculture, Murray Watt, said he wanted Australia to stay free of the disease.

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Categories
US

A Town’s Housing Crisis Exposes a ‘House of Cards’

HAILEY, Idaho — Near the private jets that shuttle billionaires to their opulent Sun Valley getaways, Ana Ramon Bartolome and her family have spent this summer living in the only place available to them: behind a blue tarp in a sweltering two-car garage.

With no refrigerator, the extended family of four adults and two young children keeps produce on plywood shelves. With no sink, they wash dishes and themselves at the nearby park. With no bedrooms, the six of them sleep on three single mattresses on the floor.

“I’m very anxious, depressed and scared,” said Ms. Bartolome, who makes her living tending to the homes of wealthy residents but cannot afford even the cheapest housing in the famous ski-and-golf playground.

Resort towns have long grappled with how to house their workers, but in places like Sun Valley those challenges have become a crisis as the chasm widens between those who have two homes and those who have two jobs. Fueled in part by a pandemic migration that has gobbled up the region’s limited housing supply, rents have soared over the last two years, leaving priced-out workers living in trucks, trailers or tents.

It is not just service workers struggling to hold on. A program director at the YMCA is living in a camper on a slice of land in Hailey. A high school principal in Carey was living in a camper but then upgraded to a tiny apartment in an industrial building. A City Council member in Ketchum is bouncing between the homes of friends and family, unable to afford a place of his own. A small-business owner in Sun Valley spends each night driving dirt roads into the wilderness, parking his box truck under the trees and settling down for the night.

The housing shortfall is now threatening to paralyze what had been a thriving economy and cherished sense of community. The hospital, school district and sheriff’s office have each seen prospective employees bail on job offers after realizing the cost of living was untenable. The Fire Department that covers Sun Valley has started a $2.75 million fund-raising campaign to build housing for their firefighters.

Already, restaurants unable to hire enough service workers are closing or shortening hours. And the problems are starting to spread to other businesses, said Michael David, a Ketchum council member who has been working on housing issues for the past two decades.

“It’s kind of a house of cards,” he said. “It is close to toppling.”

Built as a destination ski resort to mirror the iconic winter appeal of the Alps, the Sun Valley area has grown into an exclusive enclave for the wealthy and famous, drawing Hollywood celebrities, political elites from Washington and business titans from Wall Street, many of whom gather each year for Allen & Company’s annual media finance conference, known as the “summer camp for billionaires.” They have scooped up desirable vacation properties nestled next to winter ski lodges and summer golf courses, away from the gawking crowds of their home cities.

With the onset of the pandemic, the region saw an influx of wealthy buyers looking for a work-from-home destination with plentiful amenities, and the migration sent housing costs soaring even further. In Ketchum, the town next to Sun Valley, officials found that home prices shot up more than 50 percent over the past two years, with the median reaching about $1.2 million. Two-bedroom rentals went from less than $2,000 a month to more than $3,000.

Those jolts came after two decades of minimal residential construction in the city and a dramatic shift in recent years that converted renter-occupied units into those that were either kept largely vacant by their owners or used as short-term rentals.

Similar trends are happening in resort towns across the Rocky Mountain West, including Jackson Hole, Wyo., Aspen, Colo., and Whitefish, Mont. Although some larger employers, including the Sun Valley Company, have developed dorm-style living options for seasonal workers, those have done little to change the housing trajectories for the broader communities.

People filed into a regional food bank in Bellevue, Idaho, one recent afternoon, ordering boxes of food from a warehouse stocked with cereal, fresh produce and Idaho potatoes. One family there said they were being evicted from the trailer park where they live because the land was going to be redeveloped. They had been unable to find a new place and were fearful about what was coming next.

The food bank has experienced a surge in demand in the past two years, serving about 200 families each week to nearly 500 with the number still climbing, said Brooke Pace McKenna, a leader at the Hunger Coalition, which runs the food bank.

“More and more, we are seeing the teachers, the policemen, the Fire Department,” Ms. McKenna said.

Kayla Burton had grown up in the Sun Valley region and moved away after high school more than a decade ago. When she returned last year to take a job as a high school principal, she and her husband de ella, who is a teacher, were shocked at how hard it was to find a place to live. Home prices were spinning out of control, she said, even for places that were in desperate need of repairs. When rentals became available, the properties were flooded with applicants. The couple looked at trying to build their own place but found that the cost was far out of reach.

Ms. Burton and her husband moved into a camper on their parents’ property. The couple have since managed to find a unit inside an industrial building with no air-conditioning, leaving them wondering if it is the kind of place where they would want to start a family.

“We are in this weird limbo spot in our lives right now,” she said.

With some job applicants unwilling to make the move, the region’s school district now has 26 job openings, some that have gone unfilled for months. The district is working on plans to develop seven affordable housing units for employees.

Gretchen Gorham, the co-owner of the Johnny G’s Subshack sandwich shop in Ketchum, said that while it was vital to find housing for firefighters, teachers and nurses, she also worried about the many people who service vehicles, equipment and homes.

This year, Ketchum officials asked voters to approve a tax increase to fund affordable housing for hundreds of workers over the next 10 years. It did not pass.

“We live in a town of Wizard of Oz,” Ms. Gorham said. “People say one thing, and then behind a closed curtain they’re doing another.”

Officials in the region have been reaching for Band-Aid solutions. In Hailey, city rules prohibit RVs from parking on private property for more than 30 days, but council members have agreed not to enforce those rules for now; as a result, RVs can be seen in driveways and side yards across town. In Ketchum, officials considered opening a tent city for workers but decided against the idea.

So in an area whose main asset is its spectacular wilderness, some people have taken refuge in the woods.

Aaron Clark, 43, who owns a window washing business, lost his long-term rental this spring when the landlord sold the property for well beyond what Mr. Clark could afford. Knowing the exorbitant cost of all the other options around him, Mr. Clark moved into the box truck he uses to shuttle his ladders and washing equipment.

Inside the truck, he has a bed and cabinets, and he recently added amenities like a sink with running water and solar power. He also got a refrigerator, so he no longer has to keep restocking an icebox for his food from it. Out the back is a shower hose with heated water.

Each night, when he’s done working, he drives out into the wilderness to park for the night. One recent day, he found a spot at the end of a potholed dirt road, next to a stream, where he spent a bit of time assessing the cryptocurrency market on his computer and then played fetch with his dog. Mr. Clark said he had found joy in the lifestyle, which at least has allowed him to save for when he eventually re-enters the housing market.

But it has its challenges.

“It is a drain, every day, deciding, ‘Where am I going to park, where am I going to go?’” he said. “You get off work, you are tired, you are hungry, you are dirty, and now you have to decide what you are going to do next.”

For the region’s many Latino workers, about one-quarter to one-half are living in difficult situations, said Herbert Romero, co-founder of Neighbors Helping Neighbors, a group that works with the community. He said he had seen up to 10 people living in two-bedroom mobile homes. Others are living on couches. Some have been living in vehicles.

Ricky Williams, 37, grew up in the region before moving away and starting a career in firefighting. A year ago, he and his wife planned to return to the Sun Valley area, anticipating a high cost of living but still unprepared for what they would find.

He recalled checking out one dilapidated home that was on the market for $750,000 — well beyond their budget with him as a full-time firefighter and his wife as a small-business owner — and there was a rush of potential buyers on the day it was available to see. He said the couple was lucky to get one of the Fire Department’s existing housing units, paying discounted rent to live next to a fire station in exchange for being on call outside regular work hours.

Mr. Williams said he feared what was becoming of his hometown as he watched people priced out and moving away.

“It’s affected so many of my friends and family,” he said. “I came back here to this community to give back to the community. And I kind of see it slowly drifting away. It’s pretty heartbreaking.”

Categories
Entertainment

Charlotte Rampling, 76, recalls flirting with Russell Crowe, 58, before he became a huge movie star

‘He’s a very attractive young man’: Screen icon Charlotte Rampling, 76, recalls flirting with Russell Crowe, 58, before he became a huge movie star

Charlotte Rampling collected the time she enjoyed a flirt with Russell Crowe before he hit the big time in his acting career.

The Oscar-nominated actress, who leapt to prominence in Georgy Girl – ‘a doll never out of trouble’ – recalls co-starring with Russell, 58, in 1993 Australian romantic drama Hammers Over The Anvil.

And still bewitching at 76, Charlotte was in the mood for disclosure.

Memories: Charlotte Rampling collected the time she enjoyed a flirt with Russell Crowe before he hit the big time in his acting career

Memories: Charlotte Rampling collected the time she enjoyed a flirt with Russell Crowe before he hit the big time in his acting career

At the time, she was married to philandering French musician Jean-Michel Jarre, now 73, while Crowe was in an on-off relationship with actress Danielle Spencer, who later became his wife.

And speaking to The Daily Mail’s Richard Eden, Charlotte said that the younger Russell was: ‘A very attractive young man’, explaining that it was before Crowe, now ‘became huge’ thanks to films including 2000’s Gladiator.

She went on: ‘I had a flirt. You could leave it at that.’

Co-stars: The Oscar-nominated actress, who leapt to prominence in Georgy Girl — 'a doll never out of trouble' — recalls co-starring with Russell Crowe in 1993 film Hammers Over The Anvil

Co-stars: The Oscar-nominated actress, who leapt to prominence in Georgy Girl — ‘a doll never out of trouble’ — recalls co-starring with Russell Crowe in 1993 film Hammers Over The Anvil

Screen siren: Still bewitching at 76, Charlotte was in the mood for disclosure

Screen siren: Still bewitching at 76, Charlotte was in the mood for disclosure

Last year, she acknowledged that, in the 1960s, she enjoyed a menage a trois with Bryan Southcombe, later her first husband, and model Randall Laurence, but had for years denied it because her parents were ‘quite conventional’.

Speaking about her relationships, she explained to The Guardian: ‘Well, I did have two boyfriends which was racy at the time,’ she told an interviewer. ‘We were all very young. It was all chop and change. Quite a lot of things were experimental.’

Rampling, a colonel’s daughter, was always known to be close to both Bryan Southcombe, her agent and publicist, and model Randall Laurence. But she doggedly ducked the question as to just how close.

Star: Charlotte said that the younger Russell was: 'A very attractive young man', explaining that it was before Crowe, now 'became huge' thanks to films including 2000's Gladiator (pictured)

Star: Charlotte said that the younger Russell was: ‘A very attractive young man’, explaining that it was before Crowe, now ‘became huge’ thanks to films including 2000’s Gladiator (pictured)

Asked now why she failed to address the truth over the years she replied: ‘You still had parents who were quite conventional and you needed to protect them and I didn’t want people in the golf club thinking… you have to keep up appearances, don’t you?’

Photographs from the time show a carefree Rampling happily posing with both men.

When she became pregnant with her son Barnaby, now a successful film-maker, she chose to marry Southcombe. Pictures from their wedding day in 1972 show New Zealand-born Laurence looking on approvingly from the car.

Asked why she chose Southcombe, Rampling told The Guardian: ‘Who knows what life has to offer you? But sometimes choices have to be made and I chose Bryan because I got pregnant.

‘And you will say, “How do you know it was his?” I won’t go any further. But I chose Bryan and Bryan is Barnaby’s father.’

Staying coy: She went on: 'I had a flirt.  You could leave it at that'

Staying coy: She went on: ‘I had a flirt. You could leave it at that’

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Sports

Emma McKeon becomes most successful Commonwealth Games athlete with 11th gold medal | Commonwealth Games 2022

Emma McKeon has written her name into the history books as the most successful athlete in Commonwealth Games history after winning her 11th gold medal in the women’s 50m freestyle, as the Australian women’s 4x200m freestyle relay team set Birmingham alight with a world record.

Australia cemented their hold atop the medal table on day three, with a further nine golds across rugby sevens, gymnastics, swimming and track cycling to take the country’s total haul to 22 gold – double that of host nation England in second place.

In a stunning performance at the Sandwell Aquatics Centre, Ariarne Titmus clocked the fastest-ever women’s 200m freestyle split to anchor the Australian relay team of Madi Wilson, Kiah Melverton and Mollie O’Callaghan to gold in a world-record seven minutes and 39.29 seconds and better the mark of 7:40.33 set by China at the Tokyo Olympics.

And women’s 100m backstroke world record holder Kaylee McKeown won her pet event.

Ariarne Titmus is congratulated by teammates Madi Wilson, Kiah Melverton and Mollie O'Callaghan after her record-setting split in the women's 4x200m freestyle relay.
Ariarne Titmus is congratulated by teammates Madi Wilson, Kiah Melverton and Mollie O’Callaghan after her record-setting split in the women’s 4x200m freestyle relay. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images

But McKeon was the ultimate star of the show.

The Olympic champion started the one-lap final first and finished in identical fashion on Monday morning (AEST) to surpass fellow Australian greats Susie O’Neill, Ian Thorpe and Leisel Jones, who are tied on 10 gold medals a piece.

McKeon had faced stiff competition from fastest qualifiers Shayna Jack and Meg Harris but, though her compatriots emerged in the second 25m, McKeon found another gear to lead the clean sweep as Harris took silver and Jack bronze.

The triumph follows her earlier victories in Birmingham in the mixed 4×100 freestyle relay and women’s 4×100 freestyle relay. She also won four golds medals at each of the 2018 Gold Coast Games and the 2014 edition in Glasgow.

“It’s really nice to be mentioned alongside some of those names and I will be part of that history for years to come, hopefully,” McKeon said. “They’re the ones who inspired me when I was young. I remember watching them on TV and that lit the fire in me to be where I am now.

“It is special. It makes me reflect on the last eight years since my first Commonwealth Games. I can see how far I’ve come as a person and an athlete.”

McKeon, who is also Australia’s most decorated Olympian with 11 medals – five gold, two silver and four bronze – will have the opportunity to win more gold at these Games when she contests four further events. Earlier on Monday morning, she qualified fastest for the 50m butterfly final.

Australia's Maddison Levi (centre right) celebrates with rugby sevens teammates after winning gold.
Australia’s Maddison Levi (centre right) celebrates with teammates after winning rugby sevens gold. Photograph: Jacob King/PA

Also in the swimming, Zac Stubblety-Cook (men’s 100m breaststroke), Jenna Strauch (women’s 200m breaststroke) and Tim Hodge (men’s 100m breaststroke S8) grabbed silvers while Blake Cochrane (men’s 100m breaststroke S8) and Sam Williamson (men’s 100m breaststroke) secured bronzes.

And Kyle Chalmers put aside the controversy of the past 24 hours to qualify quickest for the men’s 100m final with the second-fastest time this year.

It came as Australia won gold in the women’s rugby sevens for the first time with a 22-12 defeat of Fiji in the final. Fiji, who knocked Australia out of the Tokyo Olympics in the quarter-finals and beat them during the group rounds in Birmingham, were no match for the green and gold in the final.

Madison Ashby and Madi Levi both scored tries and Faith Nathan went over twice to set up a 22-0 lead and held on as Fiji scored just before full-time and again after the siren. The men’s team settled for fourth place, losing 26-12 to New Zealand in the bronze-medal game.

In a shocking and dramatic day of cycling, Australia claimed four golds thanks to Matt Richardson (men’s sprint), Georgia Baker (women’s 25km point race), Kristina Clonan (women’s 500m time trial final), and para-cyclist Jess Gallagher and pilot Caitlin Ward (women’s tandem B 1000m time trial).

Matthew Richardson claimed a dramatic men's sprint gold.
Matthew Richardson claimed a dramatic men’s sprint gold. Photograph: Garry Bowden/REX/Shutterstock

But it was another unfortunate day for Matt Glaetzer, who thought he pipped Jack Carlin of Scotland to bronze in the sprint but was relegated after race commissaires judged he had used unfair contact.

Beau Wootton and his pilot Luke Zaccaria also secured bronze in the men’s tandem B sprint.

In the gymnastics, Georgia Godwin won her first Commonwealth Games gold medal in the all-around rhythmic. The Queenslander, who claimed silver in the teams event over the weekend, produced a rousing performance of her fourth and final discipline at Arena Birmingham, where she performed her floor routine to a Michael Bublé version of Feeling Good.

Godwin finished ahead of England’s Ondine Achampong and Canada’s Emma Spence to become the first Australian to win the event since Lauren Mitchell at Delhi 2010. The 24-year-old did so against the odds, having considered skipping the 2022 Games due to ankle injuries.

In the triathlon, Sophie Linn anchored Australia to bronze in the mixed-team relay to build on Matt Hauser’s bronze in the individual race two days ago.

The women’s cricket team claimed a nine-wicket win over Barbados to guarantee a place in the semi-finals ahead of Wednesday’s final group game against Pakistan.

Olympic silver medal-winning volleyball team, Taliqua Clancy and Mariafe Artacho del Solar, won their opening pool match, beating Sri Lanka in straight sets.

Categories
Australia

Australia facing $15 pints as largest beer tax hike in decades looms

A pint at the pub could soon cost punters up to $15 as Australia faces its biggest beer tax hike in decades.

The tax is set to increase by four per cent, or $2.50 more per liter, marking the largest jump in 30 years.

Buying your own drinks at the bottle shop is no way to avoid the hike either, with taxes on a carton to rise to $18.80.

beer
Australia is facing its biggest beer tax hike in decades. (iStock)

The Brewers Association is pleading for some relief, saying people could be paying up to $15 a pint under the new increase.

“Australians are taxed on beer more than almost any other nation. We have seen almost 20 increases in Australia’s beer tax over the past decade alone,” CEO John Preston said.

“Brewers and pub and club operators were extremely disappointed the former Government did not deliver on a proposed reduction in beer tax at this year’s March Budget.”

Cosiest winter restaurants
Pubs and bars are facing increased tax costs. (TheFork)

Preston said it wouldn’t just be pub patrons affected.

“For a small pub, club or other venue the latest tax hike will mean an increase of more than $2700 a year in their tax bill – at a time when they are still struggling to deal with the on-going impacts of the pandemic,” he said.

“This is a problem that the new Treasurer has inherited from his predecessors and there are many competing demands on the Budget. Nonetheless, we believe there is a strong case for beer tax relief to be provided by the new Federal Government – with the hidden beer tax to go up again in February 2023.”

Treasurer Jim Chalmers has pledged to look at potential relief, but has not committed to axing the tax.

Buzz Aldrin’s moon mission jacket sells for nearly $4 million

Categories
US

Five stabbed at Apple River, Minnesota teen dead, Wisconsin sheriff says

A 17-year-old Stillwater boy was killed and four others injured Saturday in a knife attack on the Apple River in western Wisconsin. A 52-year-old Prior Lake, Minn., man was arrested, St. Croix County Sheriff Scott Knudson said.

“Thank goodness a witness had taken a photo of him,” Knudson said. “Another witness located him at the exit of the tubing area, where he was taken into custody.”

The victims and suspect were all tubing down the river around 3:45 pm, he said. The attack happened just upstream from the Hwy. 35/64 bridge in Somerset Township, close to the Minnesota border to the north and east of Stillwater. The Apple River has long been a popular summer recreational destination for Twin Cities residents.

“We don’t know yet who was connected to who, who knew each other or what precipitated it,” Knudson said. “It’s a tragic day.”

Two victims were flown to a hospital and two were taken by ambulance. All were in critical condition. The boy who died was taken by ambulance to Lakeview Hospital in Stillwater, where he was pronounced dead.

The other victims were all in stable condition, ranging from serious to critical injuries to their torso or chest areas, according to a news release from the St. Croix County Sheriff’s Office. They include two men from Luck, Wis., one 20 and the other 22 years old; a 24-year-old woman from Burnsville, Minn., and a 22-year-old man from Elk River, Minn.

The victim was being held at the St. Croix County jail, and charges are expected to come Monday, the sheriff’s office statement said.

Categories
Business

How this influencer built a $38m fortune

“I was just like, yep, this is it,” Hembrow says. “This is what I am going to be. My own boss. I want to start my own businesses.

“It was the only class that sort of made sense to me. And then I actually dropped out of uni. I was like, ‘See you later, don’t need this any more.’ ”

It was while studying that she’d post pictures of herself exercising on Instagram, which had only been around a couple of years when she was posting in 2012. Then, at 19, she fell pregnant. She was told her life was ruined.

‘so much influence’

Tammy Hembrow built up her fitness empire over 10 years from an initial $400 investment. Paul Harris

Hembrow had other ideas. She posted her pregnancy and fitness journey on Instagram and more followers flocked. She now earns millions each year by endorsing brands on social media.

“I remember how I had like 15,000 followers or something, which I thought was a huge deal at the time because, like, there weren’t a lot of people on Instagram,” she says.

“I followed a few women who had like a million followers. And I just thought it was the craziest thing. And I was like I’m going to get to that. But I also saw them and thought why they aren’t doing more with what they have. They had this big audience and they had so much influence over these people. And I couldn’t really see them taking advantage of that or starting businesses with it.”

One of the businesses she started to market to her followers was her fitness app, Tammy Fit, which she started with just $400. It began as a PDF of her workout exercises from her.

“My initial investment was about $400 I spent with someone to illustrate the exercises on the programs I was making,” she says.

“But then from that I just wanted to elevate it more and more. And then eventually came Tammy Fit the app.”

From the outside, it all looks a bit easy: post pictures of trim physique while working out; share workout tips; getrich.

But behind the filters is an ambitious business builder. And it has not all been smooth sailing, she tells the podcast. “I ended up trusting some people I shouldn’t have,” Hembrow reveals. “I didn’t really know better at the time, but I got taken advantage of and actually ended up wasting a lot of money, like hundreds of thousands of dollars.

“It was a supplier, someone we were paying to do something for the app, and they sort of just took advantage of us.”

Consult the experts

Tammy Hembrow: “I ended up trusting some people I shouldn’t have.” Paul Harris

She now takes precautions. “A lot of people look at me and think this young blonde girl, like she doesn’t know anything,” she says.

“Unfortunately, what I’ve learned from that is to really take precautions and triple- and double-check things.

“If you are not an expert in something, consult with someone that is, like a third party that could maybe let you know this person is taking advantage of you.”

She’s not the first influencer who has been taken for a ride. Jessica Sepel, who’s behind vitamins and skincare group JS Health, revealed in the first season of How I Made It that she blew a lot of money when she was trying to get her business off the ground.

“We put money towards people who screwed us basically. I had an awful experience where it was basically someone who led us on. I think at the end, it was $10,000 to $12,000 down the toilet,” Sepel told the podcast.

Hembrow admits she got a first mover advantage that’s helped fuel her business. She gained a healthy following when the platforms were in their infancy. But it doesn’t mean people can’t replicate success if they’re starting out today – the trick is to try and stand out.

“I think timing did help a lot. In my situation, I got in there at a really good time. Instagram is so saturated now. It’s a lot of people trying to do the same sort of thing. Whereas when I started, I couldn’t really see anyone doing what I was trying to do. And it was just really perfect timing. But that being said, you can still do it. You definitely can, it just might be a bit harder.”

Listen to the How I Made It podcast